The bank wants to see you.
Na noite de quinta-feira, em São Paulo, a Caixa Econômica Federal sorteou os números 40, 12, 56, 70 e 03 no concurso 7031 da Quina — mais um giro na roda semanal que transforma combinações em esperança para milhões de brasileiros. O ritual se repete seis vezes por semana, lembrando que a fortuna, quando chega, exige tanto sorte quanto burocracia para ser reclamada. Já no horizonte, a Quina de São João anuncia que o calendário da sorte tem suas próprias estações.
- Os números 40, 12, 56, 70 e 03 foram extraídos ao vivo no Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, logo após as 21h de quinta-feira — e quem segurava um bilhete começou a conferir.
- A Caixa transmitiu o sorteio pelas redes sociais e prometeu divulgar o detalhamento dos prêmios no portal Loterias Caixa nas horas seguintes.
- Prêmios abaixo de R$ 2.428,80 podem ser resgatados em casas lotéricas ou agências da Caixa, com burocracia mínima; valores iguais ou superiores exigem comparecimento presencial com documento de identidade, CPF e bilhete original.
- O concurso 7032 já estava marcado para a sexta-feira, mantendo o ritmo ininterrupto que caracteriza a Quina.
- A partir de 25 de maio de 2026, começam as vendas de bilhetes para a Quina de São João, o sorteio especial que aquece o calendário junino e atrai atenção redobrada dos apostadores.
Na quinta-feira à noite, as máquinas do Espaço da Sorte, em São Paulo, definiram os números do concurso 7031 da Quina: 40, 12, 56, 70 e 03. A Caixa Econômica Federal transmitiu o sorteio ao vivo pelas redes sociais, como faz a cada extração, e os detalhes sobre ganhadores e divisão do prêmio seriam publicados no portal Loterias Caixa nas horas seguintes.
A Quina funciona seis dias por semana, de segunda a sábado, salvo feriados nacionais — um dos sistemas de loteria mais frequentes do Brasil. O concurso 7032 já estava agendado para a sexta-feira, mantendo o ritmo que faz milhões de brasileiros voltarem a checar seus bilhetes dia após dia.
Para quem acertou, o caminho do prêmio depende do valor. Quantias abaixo de R$ 2.428,80 podem ser retiradas em qualquer casa lotérica credenciada, agência da Caixa ou, para quem apostou online, transferidas para uma conta Mercado Pago. Já prêmios a partir desse valor exigem presença física em uma agência da Caixa, com documento de identidade contendo CPF e o bilhete original em mãos — sem atalhos.
No horizonte, a Caixa já preparava o próximo evento especial: a Quina de São João, sorteio anual ligado às festas juninas, com início das vendas de bilhetes marcado para 25 de maio de 2026. Por ora, porém, o foco era nos números de quinta — e em quem os carregava no bolso.
The numbers came up on Thursday night, drawn from the machines at Espaço da Sorte in São Paulo just after nine o'clock Brasília time. Forty, twelve, fifty-six, seventy, and three. Caixa Econômica Federal, the state bank that runs Brazil's lotteries, broadcast the draw live across its social media channels, as it does every time the Quina is extracted.
The Quina runs six days a week, Monday through Saturday, barring national holidays. It is one of the most frequent drawings in the Brazilian lottery system, which means there is always another chance coming soon. In this case, Friday would bring draw 7032, continuing the rhythm that keeps millions of Brazilians checking their tickets.
Once the balls settle and the numbers are recorded, Caixa begins the work of tallying results. The details—how many matched all five numbers, how many matched four, how the prize pool divides—would be published on the Loterias Caixa portal in the hours that followed. This is where winners learn whether they have won anything at all, and if so, how much.
The redemption process depends entirely on the size of the prize. For amounts under R$2,428.80, the path is straightforward. A winner can walk into any authorized lottery outlet, any Caixa branch, or—if they played online—transfer the money directly to a Mercado Pago account. The bureaucracy is minimal. For larger prizes, the rules tighten. Anything R$2,428.80 or above must be claimed in person at a Caixa agency. The winner brings an identity document with their CPF number and the original betting slip. There is no shortcut, no remote option. The bank wants to see you.
Beyond the routine Thursday draw, Caixa was preparing for something bigger. The Quina de São João, an annual special drawing tied to the June festival season, would open for ticket sales on May 25, 2026. This is the lottery's seasonal event, the one that draws extra attention and extra money. The calendar was already set, the dates already public.
For now, though, the focus was on Thursday's numbers and whoever held them. The machinery of the lottery had done its work. The rest was waiting.
Citações Notáveis
The lottery is extracted six times per week, Monday through Saturday, except on national holidays.— Caixa Econômica Federal lottery schedule
A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Why does a lottery draw in Brazil warrant this kind of official reporting and broadcast?
Because Caixa Econômica Federal is a state institution, and the lottery is a public game. Transparency matters. People have money on these numbers. The broadcast, the published results, the clear rules about redemption—it's all part of the contract between the bank and the player.
The redemption threshold at R$2,428.80 is oddly specific. What's the logic there?
It's a practical line. Below that amount, the payout is small enough that a lottery outlet can handle it. Above it, the bank wants direct control—verification, documentation, a paper trail. It protects both the institution and the winner.
Six draws a week seems relentless. Does that frequency change how people play?
It means the lottery is always present. You never wait long for the next chance. Some people see that as opportunity; others see it as a trap. Either way, it's designed to keep the game alive in people's minds.
What's special about the Quina de São João?
It's seasonal, tied to a cultural moment. The June festivals are important in Brazil. A special draw around that time draws more players, more money, more attention. It's the same game, but with ceremony attached.
If someone wins a large prize, what's the actual experience of claiming it?
You go to a Caixa branch with your ID and your ticket. You present yourself. The bank verifies everything, processes the claim, and pays you. It's formal, deliberate. There's no anonymity in that moment. The bank knows who you are.